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      • To take charge in someone’s absence. This phrase, dating from about 1920, originally meant literally taking over the business of a store when the owner was temporarily away. Later it was expanded to more general usage, as in “She’s on sabbatical leave this semester, so Professor Jones is minding the store.”
      idioms.thefreedictionary.com/Minding the Store
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  2. The saying was popularized by the 1963 comedy movie Who's Minding the Store? starring Jerry Lewis but was certainly in use before than. For example it can be found in Joseph Heller's 1961 classic Catch-22: He was wounded in the thigh, and when he recovered consciousness he found McWatt on both knees taking care of him.

  3. Today, “minding the store” can refer to taking care of any task or responsibility when someone else is absent. Some people interpret this idiom as simply being vigilant or watchful while others see it as being in charge and making sure everything runs smoothly.

  4. Who's Minding the Store phrase. What does Who's Minding the Store expression mean? Definitions by the largest Idiom Dictionary.

  5. Who's Minding the Store? ★★½ 1963 Well, it's certainly not Lewis, who plays poodle sitter Raymond Phiffier who's in love with rich girl Barbara (St. John). Barbara's imperious mother (Moorehead) is determined to break up the duo and hires Raymond to work at the family department store (hoping he'll be a disaster), instead he becomes a ...

  6. Who is looking after the situation to make sure everything progresses smoothly or properly? With such basic oversights becoming commonplace occurrences in the $20 million project, one has to wonder who's minding the store. Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2022 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.

  7. Barbara has been keeping her heiress status to the Tuttle Department Store fortune a secret from Phiffier, knowing he is a proud person who refuses to marry her until he can afford to buy her a home. Phiffier, a dog walker, is as awkward socially as he is physically.

  8. to be responsible for making sure that nothing bad happens, especially during a time of change or when the person who is normally responsible is absent: In the short term, the agreement is intended to reassure consumers that someone is minding the store. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Managing and organizing.

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